Las Vegas Review-Journal

Bill allowing physician-assisted suicide passes California Senate

- By ALEX DOBUZINSKI­S

LOS ANGELES — The California Senate approved a physician-assisted suicide bill Thursday that would allow some terminally ill patients to obtain medication to end their lives, even as opponents criticized the bill as dangerous.

California lawmakers unveiled the bill in January in an effort tearfully welcomed by a woman whose 29-yearold daughter, Brittany Maynard, moved from California to Oregon last year to end her life after she was diagnosed with terminal brain cancer.

Maynard became a high-profile advocate for assisted suicide and was featured on People magazine’s cover.

The bill, which was approved 23-13 in the Senate, now moves to the state Assembly, said Kathy Smith, a spokeswoma­n for Democratic Sen. Bill Monning, one of the bill’s sponsors.

If it becomes law, the most populous state would join Oregon, Washington state, Montana and Vermont in allowing some form of physician-assisted suicide.

The California legislatio­n, which is modeled after an Oregon law, would al- low adults suffering from incurable and irreversib­le illnesses that doctors say will kill them within six months to obtain medication that they could self-administer to end their lives.

Two physicians would be required to confirm a patient has six months or less to live and verify the patient has the competency to make health care decisions.

Backers of the assisted suicide proposal earlier had made some changes to the bill after it initially met strong opposition from hospitals, doctors, anti-abortion organizati­ons and disability-rights groups.

Participat­ion by doctors and pharmacist­s would be voluntary, and the bill would make it a felony to pressure people into ending their lives or forging a request.

The bill got a boost last month after the California Medical Associatio­n dropped its three-decade opposition to physician-assisted suicide, changing its position to neutral, in the first such move by a state medical associatio­n.

Critics said they feared some patients might be steered toward assisted suicide if insurers deny or even delay coverage for costly life-sustaining medical treatments.

REUTERS

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